Morvan : Jérôme Robart conte Giono en plein air, à Saint-Germain-de-Modéon
Jérôme Robart, alias Nicolas Le Floch sur France 2, est un néo-morvandiau convaincu. À Saint-Germain-de-Modéon, où l’acteur est installé, il lira en plein air L’Homme qui plantait des arbres de Giono. À découvrir du 6 au 16 août. (more…)
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Le prix Jules Renard du théâtre à Jérôme Robart
Le prix Jules Renard du théâtre à Jérôme Robart raffi-art.com/…
https://raffaelapflueger.com/home/web01001/public_html/cli/30-news/theatre-2019/16507-le-prix-jules-renard-du-theatre-a-jerome-robart.html
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Trump immigration ban dismantled by government after court order
Doug Stanglin, Usa Today, Feb. 4, 2017
The federal government, honoring a court order, began dismantling President Trump’s travel ban Saturday even as the president derided the ruling as “ridiculous.”
U.S. District Senior Judge James Robart issued the temporary restraining order Friday night that immediately lifted the ban that sought to block people from seven majority-Muslim countries, or any refugees, from entering the country.
The State Department said it was restoring tens of thousands of canceled visas for foreigners while the Department of Homeland Security “suspended all actions” for enforcing the ban and instead began standard inspection of travelers.
With legal challenges pending, two prominent Middle Eastern air carriers, Qatar Airways and Etihad Airways, national carrier of the United Arab Emirates, said U.S.-bound travelers from those countries with valid visas would be allowed to board. Air France, British Airways, Egyptair, Emirates Airlines, KLM, and Lufthansa also notified affected passengers about the change.
President Trump, in a Saturday morning tweetstorm, disparaged the judge’s credentials and the nationwide temporary restraining order.
“The opinion of this so-called judge, which essentially takes law-enforcement away from our country, is ridiculous and will be overturned!” Trump tweeted from the Winter White House in Mar-a-Lago.
“When a country is no longer able to say who can, and who cannot, come in & out, especially for reasons of safety & security--big trouble!” he wrote.
In issuing his decision, Robart sided with Washington Attorney General Bob Ferguson, who filed a suit to block key provisions of the president’s executive order, which sought to block people from seven majority-Muslim countries, or any refugees, from entering the country.
Trump’s executive order, signed Jan. 27, suspended the entry of all refugees to the U.S. for 120 days, halted admission of refugees from Syria indefinitely and barred entry for three months to residents from the predominantly Muslim countries of Iraq, Syria, Iran, Sudan, Libya, Somalia and Yemen.
The ACLU and other advocacy groups had been working to extend a temporary stay on the order issued last week after it sparked chaos and protests at airports across the country. On Saturday, such groups were urging travelers caught in limbo to act quickly.
“We encourage all U.S. visa holders who have been affected by the order to travel to the United States as soon as possible, while the stay is in place,” said Becca Heller, director of the International Refugee Assistance Project in New York.
Clare Kane, a law student intern at the Jerome N. Frank Legal Services Organization at the Yale Law School, noting that the Trump administration vowed to appeal the ruling, said “people should get on planes as soon as possible to reunite with their families, to access potentially life-saving healthcare, to flee life-threatening situations abroad, or to come home to their lives in the United States.”
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